Constraints Govern the System
- Categories
- Systems
- Sources
- The Goal, Thinking in Systems
Every system's output is limited by a small number of constraints. Performance is set by them, so improvement comes from finding and strengthening the binding constraint, while effort spent anywhere else produces little or no gain.
Reinforced By
- Bottlenecks — the constraint that caps the throughput of the whole system.
- Theory of Constraints — the five focusing steps that exploit and elevate the constraint.
- Leverage Points — a few places where a small intervention yields a large change in behavior.
Why it Matters
The Goal shows that a plant's throughput is governed entirely by its bottleneck, so an hour saved at a non-bottleneck is an illusion and an hour lost at the bottleneck is lost for the whole system. Thinking in Systems generalizes it: leverage is concentrated at a few points, and most effort is spent pushing low-leverage places. Across operations and general systems the lesson is the same: locate what actually limits the system and act there.
Tension
Constraints move. Fixing one shifts the limit elsewhere, and treating an old constraint as if it still binds wastes effort, the inertia that becomes the new constraint. Identifying the true constraint is itself hard and often counterintuitive.